| Devfs (Device File System) FAQ |
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| |
| Linux Devfs (Device File System) FAQ |
| Richard Gooch |
| 20-AUG-2002 |
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| Document languages: |
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| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| NOTE: the master copy of this document is available online at: |
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| http://www.atnf.csiro.au/~rgooch/linux/docs/devfs.html |
| and looks much better than the text version distributed with the |
| kernel sources. A mirror site is available at: |
| |
| http://www.ras.ucalgary.ca/~rgooch/linux/docs/devfs.html |
| |
| There is also an optional daemon that may be used with devfs. You can |
| find out more about it at: |
| |
| http://www.atnf.csiro.au/~rgooch/linux/ |
| |
| A mailing list is available which you may subscribe to. Send |
| email |
| to majordomo@oss.sgi.com with the following line in the |
| body of the message: |
| subscribe devfs |
| To unsubscribe, send the message body: |
| unsubscribe devfs |
| instead. The list is archived at |
| |
| http://oss.sgi.com/projects/devfs/archive/. |
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| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| Contents |
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| What is it? |
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| Why do it? |
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| Who else does it? |
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| How it works |
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| Operational issues (essential reading) |
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| Instructions for the impatient |
| Permissions persistence across reboots |
| Dealing with drivers without devfs support |
| All the way with Devfs |
| Other Issues |
| Kernel Naming Scheme |
| Devfsd Naming Scheme |
| Old Compatibility Names |
| SCSI Host Probing Issues |
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| Device drivers currently ported |
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| Allocation of Device Numbers |
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| Questions and Answers |
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| Making things work |
| Alternatives to devfs |
| What I don't like about devfs |
| How to report bugs |
| Strange kernel messages |
| Compilation problems with devfsd |
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| Other resources |
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| Translations of this document |
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| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| What is it? |
| |
| Devfs is an alternative to "real" character and block special devices |
| on your root filesystem. Kernel device drivers can register devices by |
| name rather than major and minor numbers. These devices will appear in |
| devfs automatically, with whatever default ownership and |
| protection the driver specified. A daemon (devfsd) can be used to |
| override these defaults. Devfs has been in the kernel since 2.3.46. |
| |
| NOTE that devfs is entirely optional. If you prefer the old |
| disc-based device nodes, then simply leave CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=n (the |
| default). In this case, nothing will change. ALSO NOTE that if you do |
| enable devfs, the defaults are such that full compatibility is |
| maintained with the old devices names. |
| |
| There are two aspects to devfs: one is the underlying device |
| namespace, which is a namespace just like any mounted filesystem. The |
| other aspect is the filesystem code which provides a view of the |
| device namespace. The reason I make a distinction is because devfs |
| can be mounted many times, with each mount showing the same device |
| namespace. Changes made are global to all mounted devfs filesystems. |
| Also, because the devfs namespace exists without any devfs mounts, you |
| can easily mount the root filesystem by referring to an entry in the |
| devfs namespace. |
| |
| |
| The cost of devfs is a small increase in kernel code size and memory |
| usage. About 7 pages of code (some of that in __init sections) and 72 |
| bytes for each entry in the namespace. A modest system has only a |
| couple of hundred device entries, so this costs a few more |
| pages. Compare this with the suggestion to put /dev on a <a |
| href="#why-faq-ramdisc">ramdisc. |
| |
| On a typical machine, the cost is under 0.2 percent. On a modest |
| system with 64 MBytes of RAM, the cost is under 0.1 percent. The |
| accusations of "bloatware" levelled at devfs are not justified. |
| |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| Why do it? |
| |
| There are several problems that devfs addresses. Some of these |
| problems are more serious than others (depending on your point of |
| view), and some can be solved without devfs. However, the totality of |
| these problems really calls out for devfs. |
| |
| The choice is a patchwork of inefficient user space solutions, which |
| are complex and likely to be fragile, or to use a simple and efficient |
| devfs which is robust. |
| |
| There have been many counter-proposals to devfs, all seeking to |
| provide some of the benefits without actually implementing devfs. So |
| far there has been an absence of code and no proposed alternative has |
| been able to provide all the features that devfs does. Further, |
| alternative proposals require far more complexity in user-space (and |
| still deliver less functionality than devfs). Some people have the |
| mantra of reducing "kernel bloat", but don't consider the effects on |
| user-space. |
| |
| A good solution limits the total complexity of kernel-space and |
| user-space. |
| |
| |
| Major&minor allocation |
| |
| The existing scheme requires the allocation of major and minor device |
| numbers for each and every device. This means that a central |
| co-ordinating authority is required to issue these device numbers |
| (unless you're developing a "private" device driver), in order to |
| preserve uniqueness. Devfs shifts the burden to a namespace. This may |
| not seem like a huge benefit, but actually it is. Since driver authors |
| will naturally choose a device name which reflects the functionality |
| of the device, there is far less potential for namespace conflict. |
| Solving this requires a kernel change. |
| |
| /dev management |
| |
| Because you currently access devices through device nodes, these must |
| be created by the system administrator. For standard devices you can |
| usually find a MAKEDEV programme which creates all these (hundreds!) |
| of nodes. This means that changes in the kernel must be reflected by |
| changes in the MAKEDEV programme, or else the system administrator |
| creates device nodes by hand. |
| |
| The basic problem is that there are two separate databases of |
| major and minor numbers. One is in the kernel and one is in /dev (or |
| in a MAKEDEV programme, if you want to look at it that way). This is |
| duplication of information, which is not good practice. |
| Solving this requires a kernel change. |
| |
| /dev growth |
| |
| A typical /dev has over 1200 nodes! Most of these devices simply don't |
| exist because the hardware is not available. A huge /dev increases the |
| time to access devices (I'm just referring to the dentry lookup times |
| and the time taken to read inodes off disc: the next subsection shows |
| some more horrors). |
| |
| An example of how big /dev can grow is if we consider SCSI devices: |
| |
| host 6 bits (say up to 64 hosts on a really big machine) |
| channel 4 bits (say up to 16 SCSI buses per host) |
| id 4 bits |
| lun 3 bits |
| partition 6 bits |
| TOTAL 23 bits |
| |
| |
| This requires 8 Mega (1024*1024) inodes if we want to store all |
| possible device nodes. Even if we scrap everything but id,partition |
| and assume a single host adapter with a single SCSI bus and only one |
| logical unit per SCSI target (id), that's still 10 bits or 1024 |
| inodes. Each VFS inode takes around 256 bytes (kernel 2.1.78), so |
| that's 256 kBytes of inode storage on disc (assuming real inodes take |
| a similar amount of space as VFS inodes). This is actually not so bad, |
| because disc is cheap these days. Embedded systems would care about |
| 256 kBytes of /dev inodes, but you could argue that embedded systems |
| would have hand-tuned /dev directories. I've had to do just that on my |
| embedded systems, but I would rather just leave it to devfs. |
| |
| Another issue is the time taken to lookup an inode when first |
| referenced. Not only does this take time in scanning through a list in |
| memory, but also the seek times to read the inodes off disc. |
| This could be solved in user-space using a clever programme which |
| scanned the kernel logs and deleted /dev entries which are not |
| available and created them when they were available. This programme |
| would need to be run every time a new module was loaded, which would |
| slow things down a lot. |
| |
| There is an existing programme called scsidev which will automatically |
| create device nodes for SCSI devices. It can do this by scanning files |
| in /proc/scsi. Unfortunately, to extend this idea to other device |
| nodes would require significant modifications to existing drivers (so |
| they too would provide information in /proc). This is a non-trivial |
| change (I should know: devfs has had to do something similar). Once |
| you go to this much effort, you may as well use devfs itself (which |
| also provides this information). Furthermore, such a system would |
| likely be implemented in an ad-hoc fashion, as different drivers will |
| provide their information in different ways. |
| |
| Devfs is much cleaner, because it (naturally) has a uniform mechanism |
| to provide this information: the device nodes themselves! |
| |
| |
| Node to driver file_operations translation |
| |
| There is an important difference between the way disc-based character |
| and block nodes and devfs entries make the connection between an entry |
| in /dev and the actual device driver. |
| |
| With the current 8 bit major and minor numbers the connection between |
| disc-based c&b nodes and per-major drivers is done through a |
| fixed-length table of 128 entries. The various filesystem types set |
| the inode operations for c&b nodes to {chr,blk}dev_inode_operations, |
| so when a device is opened a few quick levels of indirection bring us |
| to the driver file_operations. |
| |
| For miscellaneous character devices a second step is required: there |
| is a scan for the driver entry with the same minor number as the file |
| that was opened, and the appropriate minor open method is called. This |
| scanning is done *every time* you open a device node. Potentially, you |
| may be searching through dozens of misc. entries before you find your |
| open method. While not an enormous performance overhead, this does |
| seem pointless. |
| |
| Linux *must* move beyond the 8 bit major and minor barrier, |
| somehow. If we simply increase each to 16 bits, then the indexing |
| scheme used for major driver lookup becomes untenable, because the |
| major tables (one each for character and block devices) would need to |
| be 64 k entries long (512 kBytes on x86, 1 MByte for 64 bit |
| systems). So we would have to use a scheme like that used for |
| miscellaneous character devices, which means the search time goes up |
| linearly with the average number of major device drivers on your |
| system. Not all "devices" are hardware, some are higher-level drivers |
| like KGI, so you can get more "devices" without adding hardware |
| You can improve this by creating an ordered (balanced:-) |
| binary tree, in which case your search time becomes log(N). |
| Alternatively, you can use hashing to speed up the search. |
| But why do that search at all if you don't have to? Once again, it |
| seems pointless. |
| |
| Note that devfs doesn't use the major&minor system. For devfs |
| entries, the connection is done when you lookup the /dev entry. When |
| devfs_register() is called, an internal table is appended which has |
| the entry name and the file_operations. If the dentry cache doesn't |
| have the /dev entry already, this internal table is scanned to get the |
| file_operations, and an inode is created. If the dentry cache already |
| has the entry, there is *no lookup time* (other than the dentry scan |
| itself, but we can't avoid that anyway, and besides Linux dentries |
| cream other OS's which don't have them:-). Furthermore, the number of |
| node entries in a devfs is only the number of available device |
| entries, not the number of *conceivable* entries. Even if you remove |
| unnecessary entries in a disc-based /dev, the number of conceivable |
| entries remains the same: you just limit yourself in order to save |
| space. |
| |
| Devfs provides a fast connection between a VFS node and the device |
| driver, in a scalable way. |
| |
| /dev as a system administration tool |
| |
| Right now /dev contains a list of conceivable devices, most of which I |
| don't have. Devfs only shows those devices available on my |
| system. This means that listing /dev is a handy way of checking what |
| devices are available. |
| |
| Major&minor size |
| |
| Existing major and minor numbers are limited to 8 bits each. This is |
| now a limiting factor for some drivers, particularly the SCSI disc |
| driver, which consumes a single major number. Only 16 discs are |
| supported, and each disc may have only 15 partitions. Maybe this isn't |
| a problem for you, but some of us are building huge Linux systems with |
| disc arrays. With devfs an arbitrary pointer can be associated with |
| each device entry, which can be used to give an effective 32 bit |
| device identifier (i.e. that's like having a 32 bit minor |
| number). Since this is private to the kernel, there are no C library |
| compatibility issues which you would have with increasing major and |
| minor number sizes. See the section on "Allocation of Device Numbers" |
| for details on maintaining compatibility with userspace. |
| |
| Solving this requires a kernel change. |
| |
| Since writing this, the kernel has been modified so that the SCSI disc |
| driver has more major numbers allocated to it and now supports up to |
| 128 discs. Since these major numbers are non-contiguous (a result of |
| unplanned expansion), the implementation is a little more cumbersome |
| than originally. |
| |
| Just like the changes to IPv4 to fix impending limitations in the |
| address space, people find ways around the limitations. In the long |
| run, however, solutions like IPv6 or devfs can't be put off forever. |
| |
| Read-only root filesystem |
| |
| Having your device nodes on the root filesystem means that you can't |
| operate properly with a read-only root filesystem. This is because you |
| want to change ownerships and protections of tty devices. Existing |
| practice prevents you using a CD-ROM as your root filesystem for a |
| *real* system. Sure, you can boot off a CD-ROM, but you can't change |
| tty ownerships, so it's only good for installing. |
| |
| Also, you can't use a shared NFS root filesystem for a cluster of |
| discless Linux machines (having tty ownerships changed on a common |
| /dev is not good). Nor can you embed your root filesystem in a |
| ROM-FS. |
| |
| You can get around this by creating a RAMDISC at boot time, making |
| an ext2 filesystem in it, mounting it somewhere and copying the |
| contents of /dev into it, then unmounting it and mounting it over |
| /dev. |
| |
| A devfs is a cleaner way of solving this. |
| |
| Non-Unix root filesystem |
| |
| Non-Unix filesystems (such as NTFS) can't be used for a root |
| filesystem because they variously don't support character and block |
| special files or symbolic links. You can't have a separate disc-based |
| or RAMDISC-based filesystem mounted on /dev because you need device |
| nodes before you can mount these. Devfs can be mounted without any |
| device nodes. Devlinks won't work because symlinks aren't supported. |
| An alternative solution is to use initrd to mount a RAMDISC initial |
| root filesystem (which is populated with a minimal set of device |
| nodes), and then construct a new /dev in another RAMDISC, and finally |
| switch to your non-Unix root filesystem. This requires clever boot |
| scripts and a fragile and conceptually complex boot procedure. |
| |
| Devfs solves this in a robust and conceptually simple way. |
| |
| PTY security |
| |
| Current pseudo-tty (pty) devices are owned by root and read-writable |
| by everyone. The user of a pty-pair cannot change |
| ownership/protections without being suid-root. |
| |
| This could be solved with a secure user-space daemon which runs as |
| root and does the actual creation of pty-pairs. Such a daemon would |
| require modification to *every* programme that wants to use this new |
| mechanism. It also slows down creation of pty-pairs. |
| |
| An alternative is to create a new open_pty() syscall which does much |
| the same thing as the user-space daemon. Once again, this requires |
| modifications to pty-handling programmes. |
| |
| The devfs solution allows a device driver to "tag" certain device |
| files so that when an unopened device is opened, the ownerships are |
| changed to the current euid and egid of the opening process, and the |
| protections are changed to the default registered by the driver. When |
| the device is closed ownership is set back to root and protections are |
| set back to read-write for everybody. No programme need be changed. |
| The devpts filesystem provides this auto-ownership feature for Unix98 |
| ptys. It doesn't support old-style pty devices, nor does it have all |
| the other features of devfs. |
| |
| Intelligent device management |
| |
| Devfs implements a simple yet powerful protocol for communication with |
| a device management daemon (devfsd) which runs in user space. It is |
| possible to send a message (either synchronously or asynchronously) to |
| devfsd on any event, such as registration/unregistration of device |
| entries, opening and closing devices, looking up inodes, scanning |
| directories and more. This has many possibilities. Some of these are |
| already implemented. See: |
| |
| |
| http://www.atnf.csiro.au/~rgooch/linux/ |
| |
| Device entry registration events can be used by devfsd to change |
| permissions of newly-created device nodes. This is one mechanism to |
| control device permissions. |
| |
| Device entry registration/unregistration events can be used to run |
| programmes or scripts. This can be used to provide automatic mounting |
| of filesystems when a new block device media is inserted into the |
| drive. |
| |
| Asynchronous device open and close events can be used to implement |
| clever permissions management. For example, the default permissions on |
| /dev/dsp do not allow everybody to read from the device. This is |
| sensible, as you don't want some remote user recording what you say at |
| your console. However, the console user is also prevented from |
| recording. This behaviour is not desirable. With asynchronous device |
| open and close events, you can have devfsd run a programme or script |
| when console devices are opened to change the ownerships for *other* |
| device nodes (such as /dev/dsp). On closure, you can run a different |
| script to restore permissions. An advantage of this scheme over |
| modifying the C library tty handling is that this works even if your |
| programme crashes (how many times have you seen the utmp database with |
| lingering entries for non-existent logins?). |
| |
| Synchronous device open events can be used to perform intelligent |
| device access protections. Before the device driver open() method is |
| called, the daemon must first validate the open attempt, by running an |
| external programme or script. This is far more flexible than access |
| control lists, as access can be determined on the basis of other |
| system conditions instead of just the UID and GID. |
| |
| Inode lookup events can be used to authenticate module autoload |
| requests. Instead of using kmod directly, the event is sent to |
| devfsd which can implement an arbitrary authentication before loading |
| the module itself. |
| |
| Inode lookup events can also be used to construct arbitrary |
| namespaces, without having to resort to populating devfs with symlinks |
| to devices that don't exist. |
| |
| Speculative Device Scanning |
| |
| Consider an application (like cdparanoia) that wants to find all |
| CD-ROM devices on the system (SCSI, IDE and other types), whether or |
| not their respective modules are loaded. The application must |
| speculatively open certain device nodes (such as /dev/sr0 for the SCSI |
| CD-ROMs) in order to make sure the module is loaded. This requires |
| that all Linux distributions follow the standard device naming scheme |
| (last time I looked RedHat did things differently). Devfs solves the |
| naming problem. |
| |
| The same application also wants to see which devices are actually |
| available on the system. With the existing system it needs to read the |
| /dev directory and speculatively open each /dev/sr* device to |
| determine if the device exists or not. With a large /dev this is an |
| inefficient operation, especially if there are many /dev/sr* nodes. A |
| solution like scsidev could reduce the number of /dev/sr* entries (but |
| of course that also requires all that inefficient directory scanning). |
| |
| With devfs, the application can open the /dev/sr directory |
| (which triggers the module autoloading if required), and proceed to |
| read /dev/sr. Since only the available devices will have |
| entries, there are no inefficencies in directory scanning or device |
| openings. |
| |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Who else does it? |
| |
| FreeBSD has a devfs implementation. Solaris and AIX each have a |
| pseudo-devfs (something akin to scsidev but for all devices, with some |
| unspecified kernel support). BeOS, Plan9 and QNX also have it. SGI's |
| IRIX 6.4 and above also have a device filesystem. |
| |
| While we shouldn't just automatically do something because others do |
| it, we should not ignore the work of others either. FreeBSD has a lot |
| of competent people working on it, so their opinion should not be |
| blithely ignored. |
| |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| How it works |
| |
| Registering device entries |
| |
| For every entry (device node) in a devfs-based /dev a driver must call |
| devfs_register(). This adds the name of the device entry, the |
| file_operations structure pointer and a few other things to an |
| internal table. Device entries may be added and removed at any |
| time. When a device entry is registered, it automagically appears in |
| any mounted devfs'. |
| |
| Inode lookup |
| |
| When a lookup operation on an entry is performed and if there is no |
| driver information for that entry devfs will attempt to call |
| devfsd. If still no driver information can be found then a negative |
| dentry is yielded and the next stage operation will be called by the |
| VFS (such as create() or mknod() inode methods). If driver information |
| can be found, an inode is created (if one does not exist already) and |
| all is well. |
| |
| Manually creating device nodes |
| |
| The mknod() method allows you to create an ordinary named pipe in the |
| devfs, or you can create a character or block special inode if one |
| does not already exist. You may wish to create a character or block |
| special inode so that you can set permissions and ownership. Later, if |
| a device driver registers an entry with the same name, the |
| permissions, ownership and times are retained. This is how you can set |
| the protections on a device even before the driver is loaded. Once you |
| create an inode it appears in the directory listing. |
| |
| Unregistering device entries |
| |
| A device driver calls devfs_unregister() to unregister an entry. |
| |
| Chroot() gaols |
| |
| 2.2.x kernels |
| |
| The semantics of inode creation are different when devfs is mounted |
| with the "explicit" option. Now, when a device entry is registered, it |
| will not appear until you use mknod() to create the device. It doesn't |
| matter if you mknod() before or after the device is registered with |
| devfs_register(). The purpose of this behaviour is to support |
| chroot(2) gaols, where you want to mount a minimal devfs inside the |
| gaol. Only the devices you specifically want to be available (through |
| your mknod() setup) will be accessible. |
| |
| 2.4.x kernels |
| |
| As of kernel 2.3.99, the VFS has had the ability to rebind parts of |
| the global filesystem namespace into another part of the namespace. |
| This now works even at the leaf-node level, which means that |
| individual files and device nodes may be bound into other parts of the |
| namespace. This is like making links, but better, because it works |
| across filesystems (unlike hard links) and works through chroot() |
| gaols (unlike symbolic links). |
| |
| Because of these improvements to the VFS, the multi-mount capability |
| in devfs is no longer needed. The administrator may create a minimal |
| device tree inside a chroot(2) gaol by using VFS bindings. As this |
| provides most of the features of the devfs multi-mount capability, I |
| removed the multi-mount support code (after issuing an RFC). This |
| yielded code size reductions and simplifications. |
| |
| If you want to construct a minimal chroot() gaol, the following |
| command should suffice: |
| |
| mount --bind /dev/null /gaol/dev/null |
| |
| |
| Repeat for other device nodes you want to expose. Simple! |
| |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| Operational issues |
| |
| |
| Instructions for the impatient |
| |
| Nobody likes reading documentation. People just want to get in there |
| and play. So this section tells you quickly the steps you need to take |
| to run with devfs mounted over /dev. Skip these steps and you will end |
| up with a nearly unbootable system. Subsequent sections describe the |
| issues in more detail, and discuss non-essential configuration |
| options. |
| |
| Devfsd |
| OK, if you're reading this, I assume you want to play with |
| devfs. First you should ensure that /usr/src/linux contains a |
| recent kernel source tree. Then you need to compile devfsd, the device |
| management daemon, available at |
| |
| http://www.atnf.csiro.au/~rgooch/linux/. |
| Because the kernel has a naming scheme |
| which is quite different from the old naming scheme, you need to |
| install devfsd so that software and configuration files that use the |
| old naming scheme will not break. |
| |
| Compile and install devfsd. You will be provided with a default |
| configuration file /etc/devfsd.conf which will provide |
| compatibility symlinks for the old naming scheme. Don't change this |
| config file unless you know what you're doing. Even if you think you |
| do know what you're doing, don't change it until you've followed all |
| the steps below and booted a devfs-enabled system and verified that it |
| works. |
| |
| Now edit your main system boot script so that devfsd is started at the |
| very beginning (before any filesystem |
| checks). /etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit is often the main boot script |
| on systems with SysV-style boot scripts. On systems with BSD-style |
| boot scripts it is often /etc/rc. Also check |
| /sbin/rc. |
| |
| NOTE that the line you put into the boot |
| script should be exactly: |
| |
| /sbin/devfsd /dev |
| |
| DO NOT use some special daemon-launching |
| programme, otherwise the boot script may not wait for devfsd to finish |
| initialising. |
| |
| System Libraries |
| There may still be some problems because of broken software making |
| assumptions about device names. In particular, some software does not |
| handle devices which are symbolic links. If you are running a libc 5 |
| based system, install libc 5.4.44 (if you have libc 5.4.46, go back to |
| libc 5.4.44, which is actually correct). If you are running a glibc |
| based system, make sure you have glibc 2.1.3 or later. |
| |
| /etc/securetty |
| PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules) is supposed to be a flexible |
| mechanism for providing better user authentication and access to |
| services. Unfortunately, it's also fragile, complex and undocumented |
| (check out RedHat 6.1, and probably other distributions as well). PAM |
| has problems with symbolic links. Append the following lines to your |
| /etc/securetty file: |
| |
| vc/1 |
| vc/2 |
| vc/3 |
| vc/4 |
| vc/5 |
| vc/6 |
| vc/7 |
| vc/8 |
| |
| This will not weaken security. If you have a version of util-linux |
| earlier than 2.10.h, please upgrade to 2.10.h or later. If you |
| absolutely cannot upgrade, then also append the following lines to |
| your /etc/securetty file: |
| |
| 1 |
| 2 |
| 3 |
| 4 |
| 5 |
| 6 |
| 7 |
| 8 |
| |
| This may potentially weaken security by allowing root logins over the |
| network (a password is still required, though). However, since there |
| are problems with dealing with symlinks, I'm suspicious of the level |
| of security offered in any case. |
| |
| XFree86 |
| While not essential, it's probably a good idea to upgrade to XFree86 |
| 4.0, as patches went in to make it more devfs-friendly. If you don't, |
| you'll probably need to apply the following patch to |
| /etc/security/console.perms so that ordinary users can run |
| startx. Note that not all distributions have this file (e.g. Debian), |
| so if it's not present, don't worry about it. |
| |
| --- /etc/security/console.perms.orig Sat Apr 17 16:26:47 1999 |
| +++ /etc/security/console.perms Fri Feb 25 23:53:55 2000 |
| @@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ |
| # man 5 console.perms |
| |
| # file classes -- these are regular expressions |
| -<console>=tty[0-9][0-9]* :[0-9]\.[0-9] :[0-9] |
| +<console>=tty[0-9][0-9]* vc/[0-9][0-9]* :[0-9]\.[0-9] :[0-9] |
| |
| # device classes -- these are shell-style globs |
| <floppy>=/dev/fd[0-1]* |
| |
| If the patch does not apply, then change the line: |
| |
| <console>=tty[0-9][0-9]* :[0-9]\.[0-9] :[0-9] |
| |
| with: |
| |
| <console>=tty[0-9][0-9]* vc/[0-9][0-9]* :[0-9]\.[0-9] :[0-9] |
| |
| |
| Disable devpts |
| I've had a report of devpts mounted on /dev/pts not working |
| correctly. Since devfs will also manage /dev/pts, there is no |
| need to mount devpts as well. You should either edit your |
| /etc/fstab so devpts is not mounted, or disable devpts from |
| your kernel configuration. |
| |
| Unsupported drivers |
| Not all drivers have devfs support. If you depend on one of these |
| drivers, you will need to create a script or tarfile that you can use |
| at boot time to create device nodes as appropriate. There is a |
| section which describes this. Another |
| section lists the drivers which have |
| devfs support. |
| |
| /dev/mouse |
| |
| Many disributions configure /dev/mouse to be the mouse device |
| for XFree86 and GPM. I actually think this is a bad idea, because it |
| adds another level of indirection. When looking at a config file, if |
| you see /dev/mouse you're left wondering which mouse |
| is being referred to. Hence I recommend putting the actual mouse |
| device (for example /dev/psaux) into your |
| /etc/X11/XF86Config file (and similarly for the GPM |
| configuration file). |
| |
| Alternatively, use the same technique used for unsupported drivers |
| described above. |
| |
| The Kernel |
| Finally, you need to make sure devfs is compiled into your kernel. Set |
| CONFIG_EXPERIMENTAL=y, CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=y and CONFIG_DEVFS_MOUNT=y by |
| using favourite configuration tool (i.e. make config or |
| make xconfig) and then make clean and then recompile your kernel and |
| modules. At boot, devfs will be mounted onto /dev. |
| |
| If you encounter problems booting (for example if you forgot a |
| configuration step), you can pass devfs=nomount at the kernel |
| boot command line. This will prevent the kernel from mounting devfs at |
| boot time onto /dev. |
| |
| In general, a kernel built with CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=y but without mounting |
| devfs onto /dev is completely safe, and requires no |
| configuration changes. One exception to take note of is when |
| LABEL= directives are used in /etc/fstab. In this |
| case you will be unable to boot properly. This is because the |
| mount(8) programme uses /proc/partitions as part of |
| the volume label search process, and the device names it finds are not |
| available, because setting CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=y changes the names in |
| /proc/partitions, irrespective of whether devfs is mounted. |
| |
| Now you've finished all the steps required. You're now ready to boot |
| your shiny new kernel. Enjoy. |
| |
| Changing the configuration |
| |
| OK, you've now booted a devfs-enabled system, and everything works. |
| Now you may feel like changing the configuration (common targets are |
| /etc/fstab and /etc/devfsd.conf). Since you have a |
| system that works, if you make any changes and it doesn't work, you |
| now know that you only have to restore your configuration files to the |
| default and it will work again. |
| |
| |
| Permissions persistence across reboots |
| |
| If you don't use mknod(2) to create a device file, nor use chmod(2) or |
| chown(2) to change the ownerships/permissions, the inode ctime will |
| remain at 0 (the epoch, 12 am, 1-JAN-1970, GMT). Anything with a ctime |
| later than this has had it's ownership/permissions changed. Hence, a |
| simple script or programme may be used to tar up all changed inodes, |
| prior to shutdown. Although effective, many consider this approach a |
| kludge. |
| |
| A much better approach is to use devfsd to save and restore |
| permissions. It may be configured to record changes in permissions and |
| will save them in a database (in fact a directory tree), and restore |
| these upon boot. This is an efficient method and results in immediate |
| saving of current permissions (unlike the tar approach, which saves |
| permissions at some unspecified future time). |
| |
| The default configuration file supplied with devfsd has config entries |
| which you may uncomment to enable persistence management. |
| |
| If you decide to use the tar approach anyway, be aware that tar will |
| first unlink(2) an inode before creating a new device node. The |
| unlink(2) has the effect of breaking the connection between a devfs |
| entry and the device driver. If you use the "devfs=only" boot option, |
| you lose access to the device driver, requiring you to reload the |
| module. I consider this a bug in tar (there is no real need to |
| unlink(2) the inode first). |
| |
| Alternatively, you can use devfsd to provide more sophisticated |
| management of device permissions. You can use devfsd to store |
| permissions for whole groups of devices with a single configuration |
| entry, rather than the conventional single entry per device entry. |
| |
| Permissions database stored in mounted-over /dev |
| |
| If you wish to save and restore your device permissions into the |
| disc-based /dev while still mounting devfs onto /dev |
| you may do so. This requires a 2.4.x kernel (in fact, 2.3.99 or |
| later), which has the VFS binding facility. You need to do the |
| following to set this up: |
| |
| |
| |
| make sure the kernel does not mount devfs at boot time |
| |
| |
| make sure you have a correct /dev/console entry in your |
| root file-system (where your disc-based /dev lives) |
| |
| create the /dev-state directory |
| |
| |
| add the following lines near the very beginning of your boot |
| scripts: |
| |
| mount --bind /dev /dev-state |
| mount -t devfs none /dev |
| devfsd /dev |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| add the following lines to your /etc/devfsd.conf file: |
| |
| REGISTER ^pt[sy] IGNORE |
| CREATE ^pt[sy] IGNORE |
| CHANGE ^pt[sy] IGNORE |
| DELETE ^pt[sy] IGNORE |
| REGISTER .* COPY /dev-state/$devname $devpath |
| CREATE .* COPY $devpath /dev-state/$devname |
| CHANGE .* COPY $devpath /dev-state/$devname |
| DELETE .* CFUNCTION GLOBAL unlink /dev-state/$devname |
| RESTORE /dev-state |
| |
| Note that the sample devfsd.conf file contains these lines, |
| as well as other sample configurations you may find useful. See the |
| devfsd distribution |
| |
| |
| reboot. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Permissions database stored in normal directory |
| |
| If you are using an older kernel which doesn't support VFS binding, |
| then you won't be able to have the permissions database in a |
| mounted-over /dev. However, you can still use a regular |
| directory to store the database. The sample /etc/devfsd.conf |
| file above may still be used. You will need to create the |
| /dev-state directory prior to installing devfsd. If you have |
| old permissions in /dev, then just copy (or move) the device |
| nodes over to the new directory. |
| |
| Which method is better? |
| |
| The best method is to have the permissions database stored in the |
| mounted-over /dev. This is because you will not need to copy |
| device nodes over to /dev-state, and because it allows you to |
| switch between devfs and non-devfs kernels, without requiring you to |
| copy permissions between /dev-state (for devfs) and |
| /dev (for non-devfs). |
| |
| |
| Dealing with drivers without devfs support |
| |
| Currently, not all device drivers in the kernel have been modified to |
| use devfs. Device drivers which do not yet have devfs support will not |
| automagically appear in devfs. The simplest way to create device nodes |
| for these drivers is to unpack a tarfile containing the required |
| device nodes. You can do this in your boot scripts. All your drivers |
| will now work as before. |
| |
| Hopefully for most people devfs will have enough support so that they |
| can mount devfs directly over /dev without losing most functionality |
| (i.e. losing access to various devices). As of 22-JAN-1998 (devfs |
| patch version 10) I am now running this way. All the devices I have |
| are available in devfs, so I don't lose anything. |
| |
| WARNING: if your configuration requires the old-style device names |
| (i.e. /dev/hda1 or /dev/sda1), you must install devfsd and configure |
| it to maintain compatibility entries. It is almost certain that you |
| will require this. Note that the kernel creates a compatibility entry |
| for the root device, so you don't need initrd. |
| |
| Note that you no longer need to mount devpts if you use Unix98 PTYs, |
| as devfs can manage /dev/pts itself. This saves you some RAM, as you |
| don't need to compile and install devpts. Note that some versions of |
| glibc have a bug with Unix98 pty handling on devfs systems. Contact |
| the glibc maintainers for a fix. Glibc 2.1.3 has the fix. |
| |
| Note also that apart from editing /etc/fstab, other things will need |
| to be changed if you *don't* install devfsd. Some software (like the X |
| server) hard-wire device names in their source. It really is much |
| easier to install devfsd so that compatibility entries are created. |
| You can then slowly migrate your system to using the new device names |
| (for example, by starting with /etc/fstab), and then limiting the |
| compatibility entries that devfsd creates. |
| |
| IF YOU CONFIGURE TO MOUNT DEVFS AT BOOT, MAKE SURE YOU INSTALL DEVFSD |
| BEFORE YOU BOOT A DEVFS-ENABLED KERNEL! |
| |
| Now that devfs has gone into the 2.3.46 kernel, I'm getting a lot of |
| reports back. Many of these are because people are trying to run |
| without devfsd, and hence some things break. Please just run devfsd if |
| things break. I want to concentrate on real bugs rather than |
| misconfiguration problems at the moment. If people are willing to fix |
| bugs/false assumptions in other code (i.e. glibc, X server) and submit |
| that to the respective maintainers, that would be great. |
| |
| |
| All the way with Devfs |
| |
| The devfs kernel patch creates a rationalised device tree. As stated |
| above, if you want to keep using the old /dev naming scheme, |
| you just need to configure devfsd appopriately (see the man |
| page). People who prefer the old names can ignore this section. For |
| those of us who like the rationalised names and an uncluttered |
| /dev, read on. |
| |
| If you don't run devfsd, or don't enable compatibility entry |
| management, then you will have to configure your system to use the new |
| names. For example, you will then need to edit your |
| /etc/fstab to use the new disc naming scheme. If you want to |
| be able to boot non-devfs kernels, you will need compatibility |
| symlinks in the underlying disc-based /dev pointing back to |
| the old-style names for when you boot a kernel without devfs. |
| |
| You can selectively decide which devices you want compatibility |
| entries for. For example, you may only want compatibility entries for |
| BSD pseudo-terminal devices (otherwise you'll have to patch you C |
| library or use Unix98 ptys instead). It's just a matter of putting in |
| the correct regular expression into /dev/devfsd.conf. |
| |
| There are other choices of naming schemes that you may prefer. For |
| example, I don't use the kernel-supplied |
| names, because they are too verbose. A common misconception is |
| that the kernel-supplied names are meant to be used directly in |
| configuration files. This is not the case. They are designed to |
| reflect the layout of the devices attached and to provide easy |
| classification. |
| |
| If you like the kernel-supplied names, that's fine. If you don't then |
| you should be using devfsd to construct a namespace more to your |
| liking. Devfsd has built-in code to construct a |
| namespace that is both logical and easy to |
| manage. In essence, it creates a convenient abbreviation of the |
| kernel-supplied namespace. |
| |
| You are of course free to build your own namespace. Devfsd has all the |
| infrastructure required to make this easy for you. All you need do is |
| write a script. You can even write some C code and devfsd can load the |
| shared object as a callable extension. |
| |
| |
| Other Issues |
| |
| The init programme |
| Another thing to take note of is whether your init programme |
| creates a Unix socket /dev/telinit. Some versions of init |
| create /dev/telinit so that the telinit programme can |
| communicate with the init process. If you have such a system you need |
| to make sure that devfs is mounted over /dev *before* init |
| starts. In other words, you can't leave the mounting of devfs to |
| /etc/rc, since this is executed after init. Other |
| versions of init require a named pipe /dev/initctl |
| which must exist *before* init starts. Once again, you need to |
| mount devfs and then create the named pipe *before* init |
| starts. |
| |
| The default behaviour now is not to mount devfs onto /dev at |
| boot time for 2.3.x and later kernels. You can correct this with the |
| "devfs=mount" boot option. This solves any problems with init, |
| and also prevents the dreaded: |
| |
| Cannot open initial console |
| |
| message. For 2.2.x kernels where you need to apply the devfs patch, |
| the default is to mount. |
| |
| If you have automatic mounting of devfs onto /dev then you |
| may need to create /dev/initctl in your boot scripts. The |
| following lines should suffice: |
| |
| mknod /dev/initctl p |
| kill -SIGUSR1 1 # tell init that /dev/initctl now exists |
| |
| Alternatively, if you don't want the kernel to mount devfs onto |
| /dev then you could use the following procedure is a |
| guideline for how to get around /dev/initctl problems: |
| |
| # cd /sbin |
| # mv init init.real |
| # cat > init |
| #! /bin/sh |
| mount -n -t devfs none /dev |
| mknod /dev/initctl p |
| exec /sbin/init.real $* |
| [control-D] |
| # chmod a+x init |
| |
| Note that newer versions of init create /dev/initctl |
| automatically, so you don't have to worry about this. |
| |
| Module autoloading |
| You will need to configure devfsd to enable module |
| autoloading. The following lines should be placed in your |
| /etc/devfsd.conf file: |
| |
| LOOKUP .* MODLOAD |
| |
| |
| As of devfsd-v1.3.10, a generic /etc/modules.devfs |
| configuration file is installed, which is used by the MODLOAD |
| action. This should be sufficient for most configurations. If you |
| require further configuration, edit your /etc/modules.conf |
| file. The way module autoloading work with devfs is: |
| |
| |
| a process attempts to lookup a device node (e.g. /dev/fred) |
| |
| |
| if that device node does not exist, the full pathname is passed to |
| devfsd as a string |
| |
| |
| devfsd will pass the string to the modprobe programme (provided the |
| configuration line shown above is present), and specifies that |
| /etc/modules.devfs is the configuration file |
| |
| |
| /etc/modules.devfs includes /etc/modules.conf to |
| access local configurations |
| |
| modprobe will search it's configuration files, looking for an alias |
| that translates the pathname into a module name |
| |
| |
| the translated pathname is then used to load the module. |
| |
| |
| If you wanted a lookup of /dev/fred to load the |
| mymod module, you would require the following configuration |
| line in /etc/modules.conf: |
| |
| alias /dev/fred mymod |
| |
| The /etc/modules.devfs configuration file provides many such |
| aliases for standard device names. If you look closely at this file, |
| you will note that some modules require multiple alias configuration |
| lines. This is required to support module autoloading for old and new |
| device names. |
| |
| Mounting root off a devfs device |
| If you wish to mount root off a devfs device when you pass the |
| "devfs=only" boot option, then you need to pass in the |
| "root=<device>" option to the kernel when booting. If you use |
| LILO, then you must have this in lilo.conf: |
| |
| append = "root=<device>" |
| |
| Surprised? Yep, so was I. It turns out if you have (as most people |
| do): |
| |
| root = <device> |
| |
| |
| then LILO will determine the device number of <device> and will |
| write that device number into a special place in the kernel image |
| before starting the kernel, and the kernel will use that device number |
| to mount the root filesystem. So, using the "append" variety ensures |
| that LILO passes the root filesystem device as a string, which devfs |
| can then use. |
| |
| Note that this isn't an issue if you don't pass "devfs=only". |
| |
| TTY issues |
| The ttyname(3) function in some versions of the C library makes |
| false assumptions about device entries which are symbolic links. The |
| tty(1) programme is one that depends on this function. I've |
| written a patch to libc 5.4.43 which fixes this. This has been |
| included in libc 5.4.44 and a similar fix is in glibc 2.1.3. |
| |
| |
| Kernel Naming Scheme |
| |
| The kernel provides a default naming scheme. This scheme is designed |
| to make it easy to search for specific devices or device types, and to |
| view the available devices. Some device types (such as hard discs), |
| have a directory of entries, making it easy to see what devices of |
| that class are available. Often, the entries are symbolic links into a |
| directory tree that reflects the topology of available devices. The |
| topological tree is useful for finding how your devices are arranged. |
| |
| Below is a list of the naming schemes for the most common drivers. A |
| list of reserved device names is |
| available for reference. Please send email to |
| rgooch@atnf.csiro.au to obtain an allocation. Please be |
| patient (the maintainer is busy). An alternative name may be allocated |
| instead of the requested name, at the discretion of the maintainer. |
| |
| Disc Devices |
| |
| All discs, whether SCSI, IDE or whatever, are placed under the |
| /dev/discs hierarchy: |
| |
| /dev/discs/disc0 first disc |
| /dev/discs/disc1 second disc |
| |
| |
| Each of these entries is a symbolic link to the directory for that |
| device. The device directory contains: |
| |
| disc for the whole disc |
| part* for individual partitions |
| |
| |
| CD-ROM Devices |
| |
| All CD-ROMs, whether SCSI, IDE or whatever, are placed under the |
| /dev/cdroms hierarchy: |
| |
| /dev/cdroms/cdrom0 first CD-ROM |
| /dev/cdroms/cdrom1 second CD-ROM |
| |
| |
| Each of these entries is a symbolic link to the real device entry for |
| that device. |
| |
| Tape Devices |
| |
| All tapes, whether SCSI, IDE or whatever, are placed under the |
| /dev/tapes hierarchy: |
| |
| /dev/tapes/tape0 first tape |
| /dev/tapes/tape1 second tape |
| |
| |
| Each of these entries is a symbolic link to the directory for that |
| device. The device directory contains: |
| |
| mt for mode 0 |
| mtl for mode 1 |
| mtm for mode 2 |
| mta for mode 3 |
| mtn for mode 0, no rewind |
| mtln for mode 1, no rewind |
| mtmn for mode 2, no rewind |
| mtan for mode 3, no rewind |
| |
| |
| SCSI Devices |
| |
| To uniquely identify any SCSI device requires the following |
| information: |
| |
| controller (host adapter) |
| bus (SCSI channel) |
| target (SCSI ID) |
| unit (Logical Unit Number) |
| |
| |
| All SCSI devices are placed under /dev/scsi (assuming devfs |
| is mounted on /dev). Hence, a SCSI device with the following |
| parameters: c=1,b=2,t=3,u=4 would appear as: |
| |
| /dev/scsi/host1/bus2/target3/lun4 device directory |
| |
| |
| Inside this directory, a number of device entries may be created, |
| depending on which SCSI device-type drivers were installed. |
| |
| See the section on the disc naming scheme to see what entries the SCSI |
| disc driver creates. |
| |
| See the section on the tape naming scheme to see what entries the SCSI |
| tape driver creates. |
| |
| The SCSI CD-ROM driver creates: |
| |
| cd |
| |
| |
| The SCSI generic driver creates: |
| |
| generic |
| |
| |
| IDE Devices |
| |
| To uniquely identify any IDE device requires the following |
| information: |
| |
| controller |
| bus (aka. primary/secondary) |
| target (aka. master/slave) |
| unit |
| |
| |
| All IDE devices are placed under /dev/ide, and uses a similar |
| naming scheme to the SCSI subsystem. |
| |
| XT Hard Discs |
| |
| All XT discs are placed under /dev/xd. The first XT disc has |
| the directory /dev/xd/disc0. |
| |
| TTY devices |
| |
| The tty devices now appear as: |
| |
| New name Old-name Device Type |
| -------- -------- ----------- |
| /dev/tts/{0,1,...} /dev/ttyS{0,1,...} Serial ports |
| /dev/cua/{0,1,...} /dev/cua{0,1,...} Call out devices |
| /dev/vc/0 /dev/tty Current virtual console |
| /dev/vc/{1,2,...} /dev/tty{1...63} Virtual consoles |
| /dev/vcc/{0,1,...} /dev/vcs{1...63} Virtual consoles |
| /dev/pty/m{0,1,...} /dev/ptyp?? PTY masters |
| /dev/pty/s{0,1,...} /dev/ttyp?? PTY slaves |
| |
| |
| RAMDISCS |
| |
| The RAMDISCS are placed in their own directory, and are named thus: |
| |
| /dev/rd/{0,1,2,...} |
| |
| |
| Meta Devices |
| |
| The meta devices are placed in their own directory, and are named |
| thus: |
| |
| /dev/md/{0,1,2,...} |
| |
| |
| Floppy discs |
| |
| Floppy discs are placed in the /dev/floppy directory. |
| |
| Loop devices |
| |
| Loop devices are placed in the /dev/loop directory. |
| |
| Sound devices |
| |
| Sound devices are placed in the /dev/sound directory |
| (audio, sequencer, ...). |
| |
| |
| Devfsd Naming Scheme |
| |
| Devfsd provides a naming scheme which is a convenient abbreviation of |
| the kernel-supplied namespace. In some |
| cases, the kernel-supplied naming scheme is quite convenient, so |
| devfsd does not provide another naming scheme. The convenience names |
| that devfsd creates are in fact the same names as the original devfs |
| kernel patch created (before Linus mandated the Big Name |
| Change). These are referred to as "new compatibility entries". |
| |
| In order to configure devfsd to create these convenience names, the |
| following lines should be placed in your /etc/devfsd.conf: |
| |
| REGISTER .* MKNEWCOMPAT |
| UNREGISTER .* RMNEWCOMPAT |
| |
| This will cause devfsd to create (and destroy) symbolic links which |
| point to the kernel-supplied names. |
| |
| SCSI Hard Discs |
| |
| All SCSI discs are placed under /dev/sd (assuming devfs is |
| mounted on /dev). Hence, a SCSI disc with the following |
| parameters: c=1,b=2,t=3,u=4 would appear as: |
| |
| /dev/sd/c1b2t3u4 for the whole disc |
| /dev/sd/c1b2t3u4p5 for the 5th partition |
| /dev/sd/c1b2t3u4p5s6 for the 6th slice in the 5th partition |
| |
| |
| SCSI Tapes |
| |
| All SCSI tapes are placed under /dev/st. A similar naming |
| scheme is used as for SCSI discs. A SCSI tape with the |
| parameters:c=1,b=2,t=3,u=4 would appear as: |
| |
| /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m0 for mode 0 |
| /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m1 for mode 1 |
| /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m2 for mode 2 |
| /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m3 for mode 3 |
| /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m0n for mode 0, no rewind |
| /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m1n for mode 1, no rewind |
| /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m2n for mode 2, no rewind |
| /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m3n for mode 3, no rewind |
| |
| |
| SCSI CD-ROMs |
| |
| All SCSI CD-ROMs are placed under /dev/sr. A similar naming |
| scheme is used as for SCSI discs. A SCSI CD-ROM with the |
| parameters:c=1,b=2,t=3,u=4 would appear as: |
| |
| /dev/sr/c1b2t3u4 |
| |
| |
| SCSI Generic Devices |
| |
| The generic (aka. raw) interface for all SCSI devices are placed under |
| /dev/sg. A similar naming scheme is used as for SCSI discs. A |
| SCSI generic device with the parameters:c=1,b=2,t=3,u=4 would appear |
| as: |
| |
| /dev/sg/c1b2t3u4 |
| |
| |
| IDE Hard Discs |
| |
| All IDE discs are placed under /dev/ide/hd, using a similar |
| convention to SCSI discs. The following mappings exist between the new |
| and the old names: |
| |
| /dev/hda /dev/ide/hd/c0b0t0u0 |
| /dev/hdb /dev/ide/hd/c0b0t1u0 |
| /dev/hdc /dev/ide/hd/c0b1t0u0 |
| /dev/hdd /dev/ide/hd/c0b1t1u0 |
| |
| |
| IDE Tapes |
| |
| A similar naming scheme is used as for IDE discs. The entries will |
| appear in the /dev/ide/mt directory. |
| |
| IDE CD-ROM |
| |
| A similar naming scheme is used as for IDE discs. The entries will |
| appear in the /dev/ide/cd directory. |
| |
| IDE Floppies |
| |
| A similar naming scheme is used as for IDE discs. The entries will |
| appear in the /dev/ide/fd directory. |
| |
| XT Hard Discs |
| |
| All XT discs are placed under /dev/xd. The first XT disc |
| would appear as /dev/xd/c0t0. |
| |
| |
| Old Compatibility Names |
| |
| The old compatibility names are the legacy device names, such as |
| /dev/hda, /dev/sda, /dev/rtc and so on. |
| Devfsd can be configured to create compatibility symlinks so that you |
| may continue to use the old names in your configuration files and so |
| that old applications will continue to function correctly. |
| |
| In order to configure devfsd to create these legacy names, the |
| following lines should be placed in your /etc/devfsd.conf: |
| |
| REGISTER .* MKOLDCOMPAT |
| UNREGISTER .* RMOLDCOMPAT |
| |
| This will cause devfsd to create (and destroy) symbolic links which |
| point to the kernel-supplied names. |
| |
| |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| Device drivers currently ported |
| |
| - All miscellaneous character devices support devfs (this is done |
| transparently through misc_register()) |
| |
| - SCSI discs and generic hard discs |
| |
| - Character memory devices (null, zero, full and so on) |
| Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu> |
| |
| - Loop devices (/dev/loop?) |
| |
| - TTY devices (console, serial ports, terminals and pseudo-terminals) |
| Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu> |
| |
| - SCSI tapes (/dev/scsi and /dev/tapes) |
| |
| - SCSI CD-ROMs (/dev/scsi and /dev/cdroms) |
| |
| - SCSI generic devices (/dev/scsi) |
| |
| - RAMDISCS (/dev/ram?) |
| |
| - Meta Devices (/dev/md*) |
| |
| - Floppy discs (/dev/floppy) |
| |
| - Parallel port printers (/dev/printers) |
| |
| - Sound devices (/dev/sound) |
| Thanks to Eric Dumas <dumas@linux.eu.org> and |
| C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu> |
| |
| - Joysticks (/dev/joysticks) |
| |
| - Sparc keyboard (/dev/kbd) |
| |
| - DSP56001 digital signal processor (/dev/dsp56k) |
| |
| - Apple Desktop Bus (/dev/adb) |
| |
| - Coda network file system (/dev/cfs*) |
| |
| - Virtual console capture devices (/dev/vcc) |
| Thanks to Dennis Hou <smilax@mindmeld.yi.org> |
| |
| - Frame buffer devices (/dev/fb) |
| |
| - Video capture devices (/dev/v4l) |
| |
| |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| Allocation of Device Numbers |
| |
| Devfs allows you to write a driver which doesn't need to allocate a |
| device number (major&minor numbers) for the internal operation of the |
| kernel. However, there are a number of userspace programmes that use |
| the device number as a unique handle for a device. An example is the |
| find programme, which uses device numbers to determine whether |
| an inode is on a different filesystem than another inode. The device |
| number used is the one for the block device which a filesystem is |
| using. To preserve compatibility with userspace programmes, block |
| devices using devfs need to have unique device numbers allocated to |
| them. Furthermore, POSIX specifies device numbers, so some kind of |
| device number needs to be presented to userspace. |
| |
| The simplest option (especially when porting drivers to devfs) is to |
| keep using the old major and minor numbers. Devfs will take whatever |
| values are given for major&minor and pass them onto userspace. |
| |
| This device number is a 16 bit number, so this leaves plenty of space |
| for large numbers of discs and partitions. This scheme can also be |
| used for character devices, in particular the tty devices, which are |
| currently limited to 256 pseudo-ttys (this limits the total number of |
| simultaneous xterms and remote logins). Note that the device number |
| is limited to the range 36864-61439 (majors 144-239), in order to |
| avoid any possible conflicts with existing official allocations. |
| |
| Please note that using dynamically allocated block device numbers may |
| break the NFS daemons (both user and kernel mode), which expect dev_t |
| for a given device to be constant over the lifetime of remote mounts. |
| |
| A final note on this scheme: since it doesn't increase the size of |
| device numbers, there are no compatibility issues with userspace. |
| |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| Questions and Answers |
| |
| |
| Making things work |
| Alternatives to devfs |
| What I don't like about devfs |
| How to report bugs |
| Strange kernel messages |
| Compilation problems with devfsd |
| |
| |
| |
| Making things work |
| |
| Here are some common questions and answers. |
| |
| |
| |
| Devfsd doesn't start |
| |
| Make sure you have compiled and installed devfsd |
| Make sure devfsd is being started from your boot |
| scripts |
| Make sure you have configured your kernel to enable devfs (see |
| below) |
| Make sure devfs is mounted (see below) |
| |
| |
| Devfsd is not managing all my permissions |
| |
| Make sure you are capturing the appropriate events. For example, |
| device entries created by the kernel generate REGISTER events, |
| but those created by devfsd generate CREATE events. |
| |
| |
| Devfsd is not capturing all REGISTER events |
| |
| See the previous entry: you may need to capture CREATE events. |
| |
| |
| X will not start |
| |
| Make sure you followed the steps |
| outlined above. |
| |
| |
| Why don't my network devices appear in devfs? |
| |
| This is not a bug. Network devices have their own, completely separate |
| namespace. They are accessed via socket(2) and |
| setsockopt(2) calls, and thus require no device nodes. I have |
| raised the possibilty of moving network devices into the device |
| namespace, but have had no response. |
| |
| |
| How can I test if I have devfs compiled into my kernel? |
| |
| All filesystems built-in or currently loaded are listed in |
| /proc/filesystems. If you see a devfs entry, then |
| you know that devfs was compiled into your kernel. If you have |
| correctly configured and rebuilt your kernel, then devfs will be |
| built-in. If you think you've configured it in, but |
| /proc/filesystems doesn't show it, you've made a mistake. |
| Common mistakes include: |
| |
| Using a 2.2.x kernel without applying the devfs patch (if you |
| don't know how to patch your kernel, use 2.4.x instead, don't bother |
| asking me how to patch) |
| Forgetting to set CONFIG_EXPERIMENTAL=y |
| Forgetting to set CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=y |
| Forgetting to set CONFIG_DEVFS_MOUNT=y (if you want devfs |
| to be automatically mounted at boot) |
| Editing your .config manually, instead of using make |
| config or make xconfig |
| Forgetting to run make dep; make clean after changing the |
| configuration and before compiling |
| Forgetting to compile your kernel and modules |
| Forgetting to install your kernel |
| Forgetting to install your modules |
| |
| Please check twice that you've done all these steps before sending in |
| a bug report. |
| |
| |
| |
| How can I test if devfs is mounted on /dev? |
| |
| The device filesystem will always create an entry called |
| ".devfsd", which is used to communicate with the daemon. Even |
| if the daemon is not running, this entry will exist. Testing for the |
| existence of this entry is the approved method of determining if devfs |
| is mounted or not. Note that the type of entry (i.e. regular file, |
| character device, named pipe, etc.) may change without notice. Only |
| the existence of the entry should be relied upon. |
| |
| |
| When I start devfsd, I see the error: |
| Error opening file: ".devfsd" No such file or directory? |
| |
| This means that devfs is not mounted. Make sure you have devfs mounted. |
| |
| |
| How do I mount devfs? |
| |
| First make sure you have devfs compiled into your kernel (see |
| above). Then you will either need to: |
| |
| set CONFIG_DEVFS_MOUNT=y in your kernel config |
| pass devfs=mount to your boot loader |
| mount devfs manually in your boot scripts with: |
| mount -t none devfs /dev |
| |
| |
| |
| Mount by volume LABEL=<label> doesn't work with |
| devfs |
| |
| Most probably you are not mounting devfs onto /dev. What |
| happens is that if your kernel config has CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=y |
| then the contents of /proc/partitions will have the devfs |
| names (such as scsi/host0/bus0/target0/lun0/part1). The |
| contents of /proc/partitions are used by mount(8) when |
| mounting by volume label. If devfs is not mounted on /dev, |
| then mount(8) will fail to find devices. The solution is to |
| make sure that devfs is mounted on /dev. See above for how to |
| do that. |
| |
| |
| I have extra or incorrect entries in /dev |
| |
| You may have stale entries in your dev-state area. Check for a |
| RESTORE configuration line in your devfsd configuration |
| (typically /etc/devfsd.conf). If you have this line, check |
| the contents of the specified directory for stale entries. Remove |
| any entries which are incorrect, then reboot. |
| |
| |
| I get "Unable to open initial console" messages at boot |
| |
| This usually happens when you don't have devfs automounted onto |
| /dev at boot time, and there is no valid |
| /dev/console entry on your root file-system. Create a valid |
| /dev/console device node. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Alternatives to devfs |
| |
| I've attempted to collate all the anti-devfs proposals and explain |
| their limitations. Under construction. |
| |
| |
| Why not just pass device create/remove events to a daemon? |
| |
| Here the suggestion is to develop an API in the kernel so that devices |
| can register create and remove events, and a daemon listens for those |
| events. The daemon would then populate/depopulate /dev (which |
| resides on disc). |
| |
| This has several limitations: |
| |
| |
| it only works for modules loaded and unloaded (or devices inserted |
| and removed) after the kernel has finished booting. Without a database |
| of events, there is no way the daemon could fully populate |
| /dev |
| |
| |
| if you add a database to this scheme, the question is then how to |
| present that database to user-space. If you make it a list of strings |
| with embedded event codes which are passed through a pipe to the |
| daemon, then this is only of use to the daemon. I would argue that the |
| natural way to present this data is via a filesystem (since many of |
| the events will be of a hierarchical nature), such as devfs. |
| Presenting the data as a filesystem makes it easy for the user to see |
| what is available and also makes it easy to write scripts to scan the |
| "database" |
| |
| |
| the tight binding between device nodes and drivers is no longer |
| possible (requiring the otherwise perfectly avoidable |
| table lookups) |
| |
| |
| you cannot catch inode lookup events on /dev which means |
| that module autoloading requires device nodes to be created. This is a |
| problem, particularly for drivers where only a few inodes are created |
| from a potentially large set |
| |
| |
| this technique can't be used when the root FS is mounted |
| read-only |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Just implement a better scsidev |
| |
| This suggestion involves taking the scsidev programme and |
| extending it to scan for all devices, not just SCSI devices. The |
| scsidev programme works by scanning /proc/scsi |
| |
| Problems: |
| |
| |
| the kernel does not currently provide a list of all devices |
| available. Not all drivers register entries in /proc or |
| generate kernel messages |
| |
| |
| there is no uniform mechanism to register devices other than the |
| devfs API |
| |
| |
| implementing such an API is then the same as the |
| proposal above |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Put /dev on a ramdisc |
| |
| This suggestion involves creating a ramdisc and populating it with |
| device nodes and then mounting it over /dev. |
| |
| Problems: |
| |
| |
| |
| this doesn't help when mounting the root filesystem, since you |
| still need a device node to do that |
| |
| |
| if you want to use this technique for the root device node as |
| well, you need to use initrd. This complicates the booting sequence |
| and makes it significantly harder to administer and configure. The |
| initrd is essentially opaque, robbing the system administrator of easy |
| configuration |
| |
| |
| insufficient information is available to correctly populate the |
| ramdisc. So we come back to the |
| proposal above to "solve" this |
| |
| |
| a ramdisc-based solution would take more kernel memory, since the |
| backing store would be (at best) normal VFS inodes and dentries, which |
| take 284 bytes and 112 bytes, respectively, for each entry. Compare |
| that to 72 bytes for devfs |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Do nothing: there's no problem |
| |
| Sometimes people can be heard to claim that the existing scheme is |
| fine. This is what they're ignoring: |
| |
| |
| device number size (8 bits each for major and minor) is a real |
| limitation, and must be fixed somehow. Systems with large numbers of |
| SCSI devices, for example, will continue to consume the remaining |
| unallocated major numbers. USB will also need to push beyond the 8 bit |
| minor limitation |
| |
| |
| simply increasing the device number size is insufficient. Apart |
| from causing a lot of pain, it doesn't solve the management issues |
| of a /dev with thousands or more device nodes |
| |
| |
| ignoring the problem of a huge /dev will not make it go |
| away, and dismisses the legitimacy of a large number of people who |
| want a dynamic /dev |
| |
| |
| the standard response then becomes: "write a device management |
| daemon", which brings us back to the |
| proposal above |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| What I don't like about devfs |
| |
| Here are some common complaints about devfs, and some suggestions and |
| solutions that may make it more palatable for you. I can't please |
| everybody, but I do try :-) |
| |
| I hate the naming scheme |
| |
| First, remember that no naming scheme will please everybody. You hate |
| the scheme, others love it. Who's to say who's right and who's wrong? |
| Ultimately, the person who writes the code gets to choose, and what |
| exists now is a combination of the choices made by the |
| devfs author and the |
| kernel maintainer (Linus). |
| |
| However, not all is lost. If you want to create your own naming |
| scheme, it is a simple matter to write a standalone script, hack |
| devfsd, or write a script called by devfsd. You can create whatever |
| naming scheme you like. |
| |
| Further, if you want to remove all traces of the devfs naming scheme |
| from /dev, you can mount devfs elsewhere (say |
| /devfs) and populate /dev with links into |
| /devfs. This population can be automated using devfsd if you |
| wish. |
| |
| You can even use the VFS binding facility to make the links, rather |
| than using symbolic links. This way, you don't even have to see the |
| "destination" of these symbolic links. |
| |
| Devfs puts policy into the kernel |
| |
| There's already policy in the kernel. Device numbers are in fact |
| policy (why should the kernel dictate what device numbers I use?). |
| Face it, some policy has to be in the kernel. The real difference |
| between device names as policy and device numbers as policy is that |
| no one will use device numbers directly, because device |
| numbers are devoid of meaning to humans and are ugly. At least with |
| the devfs device names, (even though you can add your own naming |
| scheme) some people will use the devfs-supplied names directly. This |
| offends some people :-) |
| |
| Devfs is bloatware |
| |
| This is not even remotely true. As shown above, |
| both code and data size are quite modest. |
| |
| |
| How to report bugs |
| |
| If you have (or think you have) a bug with devfs, please follow the |
| steps below: |
| |
| |
| |
| make sure you have enabled debugging output when configuring your |
| kernel. You will need to set (at least) the following config options: |
| |
| CONFIG_DEVFS_DEBUG=y |
| CONFIG_DEBUG_KERNEL=y |
| CONFIG_DEBUG_SLAB=y |
| |
| |
| |
| please make sure you have the latest devfs patches applied. The |
| latest kernel version might not have the latest devfs patches applied |
| yet (Linus is very busy) |
| |
| |
| save a copy of your complete kernel logs (preferably by |
| using the dmesg programme) for later inclusion in your bug |
| report. You may need to use the -s switch to increase the |
| internal buffer size so you can capture all the boot messages. |
| Don't edit or trim the dmesg output |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| try booting with devfs=dall passed to the kernel boot |
| command line (read the documentation on your bootloader on how to do |
| this), and save the result to a file. This may be quite verbose, and |
| it may overflow the messages buffer, but try to get as much of it as |
| you can |
| |
| |
| if you get an Oops, run ksymoops to decode it so that the |
| names of the offending functions are provided. A non-decoded Oops is |
| pretty useless |
| |
| |
| send a copy of your devfsd configuration file(s) |
| |
| send the bug report to me first. |
| Don't expect that I will see it if you post it to the linux-kernel |
| mailing list. Include all the information listed above, plus |
| anything else that you think might be relevant. Put the string |
| devfs somewhere in the subject line, so my mail filters mark |
| it as urgent |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Here is a general guide on how to ask questions in a way that greatly |
| improves your chances of getting a reply: |
| |
| http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html. If you have |
| a bug to report, you should also read |
| |
| http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/bugs.html. |
| |
| |
| Strange kernel messages |
| |
| You may see devfs-related messages in your kernel logs. Below are some |
| messages and what they mean (and what you should do about them, if |
| anything). |
| |
| |
| |
| devfs_register(fred): could not append to parent, err: -17 |
| |
| You need to check what the error code means, but usually 17 means |
| EEXIST. This means that a driver attempted to create an entry |
| fred in a directory, but there already was an entry with that |
| name. This is often caused by flawed boot scripts which untar a bunch |
| of inodes into /dev, as a way to restore permissions. This |
| message is harmless, as the device nodes will still |
| provide access to the driver (unless you use the devfs=only |
| boot option, which is only for dedicated souls:-). If you want to get |
| rid of these annoying messages, upgrade to devfsd-v1.3.20 and use the |
| recommended RESTORE directive to restore permissions. |
| |
| |
| devfs_mk_dir(bill): using old entry in dir: c1808724 "" |
| |
| This is similar to the message above, except that a driver attempted |
| to create a directory named bill, and the parent directory |
| has an entry with the same name. In this case, to ensure that drivers |
| continue to work properly, the old entry is re-used and given to the |
| driver. In 2.5 kernels, the driver is given a NULL entry, and thus, |
| under rare circumstances, may not create the require device nodes. |
| The solution is the same as above. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Compilation problems with devfsd |
| |
| Usually, you can compile devfsd just by typing in |
| make in the source directory, followed by a make |
| install (as root). Sometimes, you may have problems, particularly |
| on broken configurations. |
| |
| |
| |
| error messages relating to DEVFSD_NOTIFY_DELETE |
| |
| This happened because you have an ancient set of kernel headers |
| installed in /usr/include/linux or /usr/src/linux. |
| Install kernel 2.4.10 or later. You may need to pass the |
| KERNEL_DIR variable to make (if you did not install |
| the new kernel sources as /usr/src/linux), or you may copy |
| the devfs_fs.h file in the kernel source tree into |
| /usr/include/linux. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| Other resources |
| |
| |
| |
| Douglas Gilbert has written a useful document at |
| |
| http://www.torque.net/sg/devfs_scsi.html which |
| explores the SCSI subsystem and how it interacts with devfs |
| |
| |
| Douglas Gilbert has written another useful document at |
| |
| http://www.torque.net/scsi/SCSI-2.4-HOWTO/ which |
| discusses the Linux SCSI subsystem in 2.4. |
| |
| |
| Johannes Erdfelt has started a discussion paper on Linux and |
| hot-swap devices, describing what the requirements are for a scalable |
| solution and how and why he's used devfs+devfsd. Note that this is an |
| early draft only, available in plain text form at: |
| |
| http://johannes.erdfelt.com/hotswap.txt. |
| Johannes has promised a HTML version will follow. |
| |
| |
| I presented an invited |
| paper |
| at the |
| |
| 2nd Annual Storage Management Workshop held in Miamia, Florida, |
| U.S.A. in October 2000. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| Translations of this document |
| |
| This document has been translated into other languages. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| The document master (in English) by rgooch@atnf.csiro.au is |
| available at |
| |
| http://www.atnf.csiro.au/~rgooch/linux/docs/devfs.html |
| |
| |
| |
| A Korean translation by viatoris@nownuri.net is available at |
| |
| http://your.destiny.pe.kr/devfs/devfs.html |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Most flags courtesy of ITA's |
| Flags of All Countries |
| used with permission. |